Not the kindest, maybe. We have no ultimate way of knowing who's kindest. But very kind. Remember Vettel-Monza and Webber-Hungary?myurr wrote:Red Bull had by far the most downforce last year yet were not the kindest to their tyres. I suspect similar this year.
That was one specific example, but for me it was more an abiding memory that Red Bull's race pace had to be more controlled so as to not wear out the tyres, hence McLaren and Ferrari catching them relative to qualifying, and that their tyres tended to be the first ones to go off.Bridgestone's technical manager Hirohide Hamashima wrote:Of the top cars, the Red Bull was taking the most out of its tyres, the Ferrari was by far the kindest. One McLaren - Jenson Button's - was almost as good as the Ferrari in its tyre usage; Lewis Hamilton's car was almost as bad as the Red Bulls.
Yeah it worked really really well for Ferrari as well /endsarcasmn smikle wrote:Told you guys that copying pays off big time!
then I think mclaren could suffer with some degrading issue during the race.myurr wrote:Three, I believe. One in Q2, two in Q3.CHT wrote:Does anybody know how many sets of option tyres did Mclaren use throughout the qualifying?
And why is that exactly? They'll start the race on the soft tyres they set their fastest Q3 laps on and then run the hards in their other stints. Red Bull used 4 sets of softs, although one set only had two installation laps due to yellow flags, and Ferrari used 4 full sets.CHT wrote:then I think mclaren could suffer with some degrading issue during the race.myurr wrote:Three, I believe. One in Q2, two in Q3.CHT wrote:Does anybody know how many sets of option tyres did Mclaren use throughout the qualifying?
myurr wrote:
And why is that exactly? They'll start the race on the soft tyres they set their fastest Q3 laps on and then run the hards in their other stints. Red Bull used 4 sets of softs, although one set only had two installation laps due to yellow flags, and Ferrari used 4 full sets.
McLaren's long run pace has looked good all weekend and Button is predicting that they'll close the gap with Red Bull and may even be able to have a shot at the win.
http://www.autosport.com/news/report.php/id/90159If you use too many tyres in qualifying to get up the grid, you are going to be penalised in the race," he said. "Because you will then have to use used tyres all the time.
"The guys who find the right balance between what they use in qualifying and what they use in the race will be the strongest. It is not necessarily good to be on pole position if you have used lots of tyres to get there."
He added: "Where it will accumulate is the end of the race. If you come in early you are going to be much faster on new tyres, but how many times can you do that? If you are the one who is coming in early then in the end you will stop three or four laps earlier than people at the end of the race, and unless you make another stop at the end of the race you are going to run out of tyres. So it is a very fine balancing act.
I'm convinced he used the softs on both runs in Q3.snowy wrote:Lewis used a set of prime for his first run in Q3 so he should have some options.